Now showing items 1-4 of 4

    • Arabidopsis research in 2030: Translating the computable plant 

      Brady, Siobhan; Auge, Gabriela; Ayalew, Mentewab; Balasubramanian, Sureshkumar; Hamann, Thorsten; Inze, Dirk; Saito, Kazuki; Brychkova, Galina; Berardini, Tanya Z.; Friesner, Joanna; Ho, Cheng-Hsun; Hauser, Marie-Theres; Kobayashi, Masatomo; Lepiniec, Loic; Mahonen, Ari Pekka; Mutwil, Marek; May, Sean; Parry, Geraint; Rigas, Stamatis; Stepanova, Anna N.; Williams, Mary; Provart, Nicholas J. (Wiley, 2025-03)
      Plants are essential for human survival. Over the past three decades, work with the reference plant Arabidopsis thaliana has significantly advanced plant biology research. One key event was the sequencing of its genome ...
    • Focus on translational research from arabidopsis to crop plants and beyond 

      Roeder, Adrienne H.K.; Argueso, Cristiana T.; Williams, Mary; Auge, Gabriela; Li, Xin; Strader, Lucia; Uauy, Cristobal; Wu, Shuang (Oxford University Press, 2025-05)
      Over the past 4 decades, substantial research efforts in plant science worldwide have focused on the model system Arabidopsis thaliana (Provart et al. 2015). Many of us have dedicated years to the study of Arabidopsis, ...
    • Introgression from local cultivars is a driver of agricultural adaptation in Argentinian weedy rice 

      Presotto, Alejandro Daniel; Hernández, Fernando; Vercellino, Roman Boris; Kruger, Raúl; Fontana, Maria Laura; Ureta, Maria Soledad; Crepy, Maria Andrea; Auge, Gabriela; Caicedo, Ana (Wiley, 2024-04-27)
      Weedy rice, a pervasive and troublesome weed found across the globe, has often evolved through fertilization of rice cultivars with little importance of crop-weed gene flow. In Argentina, weedy rice has been reported as ...
    • Unheard voices speak up : the Arabidopsis community and the representation of researchers from the Global South 

      Auge, Gabriela; Estevez, José M. (Oxford University Press, 2024-04)
      In June 2023, the Arabidopsis community met in Makuhari, Chiba, Japan, for the 33rd International Conference in Arabidopsis Research (ICAR). The meeting, at which more than 1200 researchers gathered, spanned the course of ...